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Wayne Hall
Researcher at University of Queensland
Publications - 1333
Citations - 84978
Wayne Hall is an academic researcher from University of Queensland. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cannabis & Population. The author has an hindex of 111, co-authored 1260 publications receiving 75606 citations. Previous affiliations of Wayne Hall include University of New South Wales & National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre.
Papers
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Ethical concerns in the community about technologies to extend human life span.
TL;DR: Findings from focus groups and individual interviews are presented which investigated whether members of the general public identify ethical issues surrounding life-extension, and if so, what these ethical issues are.
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Neuroscience research on the addictions: A prospectus for future ethical and policy analysis
TL;DR: It will be necessary to address ethical doubts raised about the capacity of addicted persons to give free and informed consent to participate in studies that involve the administration of drugs of dependence to realize Neuroscience research on addiction's promise to transform the long running debate between moral and medical models of addiction.
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Methadone maintenance and the human immunodeficiency virus: current issues in treatment and research
TL;DR: This paper examines the changes that have occurred in methadone maintenance programmes in response to the advent of HIV and the adoption of harm minimization policies, and the implications of these changes for research.
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Defining problematic pharmaceutical opioid use among people prescribed opioids for chronic noncancer pain: do different measures identify the same patients?
Gabrielle Campbell,Raimondo Bruno,Nicholas Lintzeris,Milton Cohen,Suzanne Nielsen,Wayne Hall,Briony Larance,Richard P. Mattick,Fiona M. Blyth,Michael Farrell,Louisa Degenhardt +10 more
TL;DR: Despite removal of tolerance and withdrawal for prescribed opioid use for DSM-5, it was found that “Addiction” was more closely related to an ICD-11 diagnosis of pharmaceutical opioid dependence.